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1 Educational Administration: Theory and Practice Summer 2006, Issue 47, pp: Kuram ve Uygulamada Eğitim Yönetimi Yaz 2006, Sayı 47, ss: The Decline of Western Education Research and the Unfortunate Balance of Trade in the Marketplace of Bad Ideas about Schooling Craig B. Howley The thesis of this article is that Western education research has widely failed to shape educational systems that cultivate public purpose in mass education and that, hence, other cultures that import this project play into the hands of transnational corporations ready to update those cultures to serve their purposes. This poor trade in the marketplace of bad ideas is already being made and it seems an unwise choice everywhere, but particularly among nations that confront most stringently the depredations of globalization. I warrant the thesis (1) with evidence of the shift of recent decades in Western educational aims from public to private purposes and (2) by describing the consequent accommodations made by Western education research, with particular attention to the role played by research in school administration. Two warnings and four alternatives seem especially apt. These are the warnings: (1) because power elites find critique inconvenient, they seek to undermine or hobble the critical mission of education research; (2) because globalization suppresses local conceptions of a decent life, the aims of imports from Western schooling should be greeted with doubt and doubt is the home of critique in research. I suggest these alternatives to the unfortunate balance of global trade in bad ideas about schooling: (1) looking at schooling from the perspectives of ordinary people, not from that of the power elites or the school profession; (2) thinking about what distinguishes research that honors a critical mission from other sorts of writing and other sorts of action; (3) regarding the deployment of methods critically studying locally a trendy Western only by first problematizing it; (4) when thinking about schooling, keeping education much more clearly in view.

2 Craig B. Howley The Decline of Western Education Research and the Unfortunate Balance of Trade in the Marketplace of Bad Ideas about Schooling Arguably, research in school administration is responsible for the failure of education research in the West. This seems a sweeping judgment, on two accounts the failure and the responsibility. But the charge is grounded in a quite simple fact. The field of school administration created and imposed designs for education systems, and the West (with cooperation from school administrators and school administration researchers) has exported the models worldwide. An important part of what has been exported is ways of thinking about schools. The responsibility is clear, and so is the failure, I will argue. What is to be done? Other forms and purposes must supplant the dominant Western mode of education research, and non-western education researchers are in a good place to take up this work (see, for example, Prakash & Stuchul, 2004). Research about school administration in the West has made its poor contribution, not surprisingly, based for a long time on business principles, according to such early critical observers as Raymond Callahan (1962). Schools run like businesses do not logically position themselves to accomplish public purposes, but to accomplish private business purposes. When Callahan wrote his classic history, Education and the Cult of Efficiency, he may have hoped to unmask and undermine the cult of which the U.S. (and many other nations) as the privatization of schooling and internationally as the globalization of schooling ( McEducation for Prakash & Stuchul, 2004). But these are not different realms and globalization means the privatization by transnational corporations of as many public spaces as possible, including the public space of schooling (Spring, 1998). Public to Private Purposes of Schooling Henry Adams, a reluctant teacher and historian, and great-grandson of the second American president, observed in his autobiography that schooling is a sort of dynamo machine for polarizing the popular mind; for turning and holding its lines of force in the direction supposed to be most effective for state purposes (Adams, 1918/1992, 14). Adams was well aware that business models and imperial intentions were, in his day, increasingly determining what the purposes of the state itself would be, and hence the future course of schooling. He resented his own schooling (at Harvard) for not teaching him that fact. 424

3 The Decline of Western Education Research The fact, however, began with hopes for something quite different about 1790, a hope grounded in the relationship between two new ideas: the citizen and the nation state. During its rise, the West invented the nationstate, a concept that standardized a defensible sovereignty with ideals of large geographic spread, a single national language, and a singular cultural outlook. As Hobsbawm (1992) points out, however, the ideal of the nation state has rarely been met, though the West does a predictably good imitation of its own invention of the ideal they invented, but they have applied it (via international regimes of trade, politics, and war in the epochs of colonialism, post-colonialism, imperialism, and globalism) to places with small territories or hundreds of languages and cultures. The application has always been in the name of doing business, and the nationstate was engineered variously, often oddly, across its short history. It is surely amusing to see Singapore treated as if it were a nation state, for instance in international comparisons of student achievement (Singapore is a city state). Of specific concern to schooling (also known as mass education ) is the revolutionary nation-state circa 1790 in North America and France (and, to be sure, Haiti though its coeval revolution is seldom cited; see Wills, 2003). Education, in these places and times, was about creating the citizen from ordinary people, previously dismissed by the aristocracy as peasants, tradesmen, or merchants (not to mention slaves). Hobsbawm (1992, p. 20) wrote, What characterized the nation-people as seen from below was precisely that it represented the common interest against particular interests, the common good against privilege. The nation-state, in short, was to be founded on the capacity of ordinary people, particularly their capacity for self-governance. What was to equip them with this capacity? It was a suitable education, increasingly to be delivered in schools, but, at least in the U.S. not originally imagined exclusively or most effectively as schooling (Cremin, 1980). The 19 th and 20 th centuries, however, increasingly built schools to the specifications that so troubled Henry Adams: the purposes of the regime and by no means of the people. Adams knew that the state s regime was guided by the will of the emerging capitalist class (emerging, that is, in the U.S. from about 1865 to 1915 and in Britain for more than 100 years before that). Callahan documented the subsequent consequences for schooling in the U.S. Joel Spring (1998) and many others have updated Callahan s cheerless picture. Such a critique does not deny the existence of many good schools in the 425

4 Craig B. Howley West concerned to help ordinary students think for themselves (many, but constituting a small minority of the whole). There are proportionally far more schools providing such schooling to the children of power elites, children who are themselves most likely to occupy positions among the power elite. What is the power elite? The critical sociologist C. Wright Mills famously identified the power elite to be those occupying the strategic command posts of the social structure (Mills, 1956, 3). It s recognizable everywhere, and now on a global scale. There is simply no doubt that the people are not in command of the state, especially the American state, the state which so loudly boasts that it is the democratic model for the planet. The world is not buying this jingoism, but the hubris is similar throughout the West (and increasingly so under the hegemony of globalized capital). The most troubling fact is that the people have so little influence over the emerging global political regimes. In fact, as many critics of globalization have noted, the citizen as an individual actor whose existence justifies the state is dead. The citizens of the new world order announced by Bush the First are transnational corporations (Bauman, 1997; Sassen, 1996), not individual ordinary people. These New World Citizens don t require nation states in the long run, though according to Saskia Sassen, they will likely tolerate them. And they certainly don t need competition from, and cannot even tolerate, the oldstyle (individual) citizen. What they need instead are clever and loyal workers on the job-site, and lazy and greedy consumers at home not interfering with corporate prerogatives, and certainly not offering any critique of local, national, or global politics, economics, ethics, or aesthetics. The New World Citizens seem to be getting what they need and there is little doubt that Western schooling (exported worldwide) is helping them to get it. Adams, Mills, Callahan, Bauman, and Sassen (among many others) have shown their readers what is up. Their reading of events is not narrow, biased, or selective, but broad, objective, and comprehensive. Their counsel is useful in putting the peculiar jingoism of globalism into proper perspective. The schooling imagined by this regime cultivates greed, technical problem solving, and competitive individualism instead of generosity, thinking, and collaborative community (Giroux, 2000). If readers doubt such claims, they may visit almost any website sponsored by the various state education agencies in the U.S. for the varied and quite explicit statements to this effect. There is occasional lip-service to 426

5 The Decline of Western Education Research community and the public good, but not much of it. My own favorite example of this jingoism, though, is a road sign in the American state of Kentucky. For several years, that state posted signs on all entering roads that read: Education pays! Kentucky thus announced greed as the guiding principle of the schooling it sponsored. And the school system in Kentucky is the most radically reformed in the U.S. These sorts of episodes, multiplied hundreds of times (with less overt offense), indicate that public purpose has nearly foundered in the U.S. under the sway of global capitalism and its shrill ideology. It is surely past time to think differently about schooling (see Howley & Howley, 2006, for one example framed for the North American context). The Accommodations of Western Education Research The preceding account is a true one, but can seem irrelevant to those struggling in the day-to-day flow. Teaching is everywhere a challenging work, even in well-funded schools dedicated to thoughtful instruction aimed at enabling the public good instead of private greed. It is in the day-to-day flow, also, that education researchers make their accommodations to the regime of post-industrial capital and its State schools and deploy scholarly resistance to it. It s important to remember, though, that education research is not a very old field, nor one with much status in the West. Education researchers are simply professors in colleges of education, some of whom conduct research as part of their quest for tenure. Colleges of education, moreover, have a very short history and a very low academic place in the ranking of academic vanities. Indeed, the expectation that their faculty will do legitimate empirical research is relatively new, emerging most strongly only in recent decades (with some vigor only after the Second World War, and not with real vigor until at least the late 1960s). Readers should temper the critique on offer in this essay with their understanding of the implications of this history. That is, education research in the West struggles for a respectable identity, and the need for that struggle is a large part of its failure. It seeks to fit into the usual ways of doing business in the Western academy. Economics. On one hand, under the prevailing regime, money (funding) is the surest route to the highest respectability. The larger the grant, the more respectable is the research and the more respectable the researcher. On the other hand, programs in school administration are cash cows many students, much tuition, some grants, and famous and durable 427

6 Craig B. Howley allegations of low program quality, in the U.S. at any rate. Their respectability, therefore, is enhanced disproportionately when they secure substantial external funding. In an organizational sense in American higher education, research is defined operationally as the quest for grants. A $US20 million grant confers not only great respectability, but considerable power. Grant programs offering hundred of millions of dollars in education research funds are rather common in the U.S. Increasingly, public universities in the U.S. are being privatized. Originally supported by the various state legislatures, U.S. most public universities currently receive a small fraction of funding in that manner. As a result, they now market degrees aggressively and pursue grants furiously. This is how privatization works. The munificence of large grants is therefore universally welcome, and cause for celebration when one is secured. I ve been involved with several. In the day-to-day flow, however, few of us stop to observe that the grants come from the regime, and with substantial implications for the funded work. In particular, this funding scheme turns researchers attention to the issues defined as important by the regime. The grants, after all, are one tool for turning and holding its lines of force. Researchers with principles at odds with the lines of force need to understand that they will be making enemies when the work done under such arrangements is offensive to the regime. Excellent education research can also be done and perhaps done more certainly and directly in other ways, with much less funding, if not for free. Professional myopia. The grant programs define issues broadly, but education professors are left to their own devices in responding to actual requests for proposals (known in the trade in the U.S. as RFPs ). What determines their responses? In nearly all cases, conventional wisdom is what determines researchers responses to RFPs. These are the responses that stand the greatest likelihood of being understood and approved. Indeed, the cycle of getting and spending such research funds is now a strong force in shaping conventional wisdom itself. For researchers who are professors in colleges of education in universities increasingly dependent on grants to escape this trap, escaping this trap is a difficult exercise. Certainly, imaginative and talented faculty can argue an unconventional perspective, even one critical of the regime. Yet, in the nature of things, 428

7 The Decline of Western Education Research these successes are quite rare and the very character of their work (critique) renders the projects and their success unstable if not always ephemeral. The regime, however, does require a modicum of tension, which limited and channeled critique supplies. But the regime doesn t need much such work. In general, successful grants twist conventional wisdom slightly, or organize and sequence it cleverly. Why are Western education researchers generally uncritical? First, many are critical. These many like the many good schools for the poor constitute a small minority of the whole. The clever researchers in favor with the regime, by contrast, accept a substantial degree of professional myopia partly as part of the bargain of playing with the regime, but in large measure the myopia arises from a commitment to a narrow empiricist conception of the project of research. This conception limits an anemic critique to footnotes or literature reviews. Numerous examples can be found in any ERIC search, and the current regime in control of ERIC cynically seeks to provide more such examples in the name of science its myopic version of science. Such are the researchers, for instance, that have recently leapt to become experts in randomized controlled experiments, which the regime in its U.S. manifestation seriously argues is the one true path to certain knowledge in education research. This outlook is just stupid and unworthy. The charge of stupidity is not mine exclusively and certainly not most notably (for a careful exposition of the charge and its scientific myopia, see Phillips, 2006; and for a pointed case study from someone whose astute scholarship was prominently discounted by the regime, see Schoenfeld, 2006). Such experimentation is certainly necessary, but it is a small part of the whole and it only makes sense contextualize to that larger whole. The story of controlled experiments in the U.S. context is another apt example of the sort of narrowing and channeling of critique that the regime intends (the story of grants programming being the other). Vanity. To be a university professor is a wonderful privilege anywhere on the planet. With success in securing the position of professor, unfortunately, too often comes a measure of vanity associated with having completed an academic degree widely misunderstood as the pinnacle of academic accomplishment. The Ph.D. is not that. Instead, it is simply another qualification under the current regime, in this case the qualification needed to enjoy the privileged life of professor. Gaining entry to this profession, especially in a college of education, is not much to be proud of. Doing good work in the role, however, most 429

8 Craig B. Howley certainly is a source of legitimate satisfaction. That satisfaction is betrayed by anyone who wants the accomplishment of good work to incite envy. Vanity is at work at several levels in our calling. The privilege of being a professor, must, to the contrary, be redeemed through hard work, in this case critical scholarship work that flies in the face of the regime of privatization and globalization. The reason has already been intimated: public purpose requires it, and public purpose is needed for the social construction of a reality that attends to issues of justice and (arguably) human survival on a planet being ravaged by unopposed global capital. Two Warnings The New World Citizens are delighted to have Western models of schooling adopted worldwide and they are also pleased to have schooling managed by a technocratic sort of research apparatus one that avoids the very thing that makes education research research (as opposed to evaluation or engineering). Education research that lacks critique is sterile; the regime s tendency is to reconstruct research as mere evaluation (read on). The two warnings that follow are implicit in the preceding discussion. First warning. The first warning is that power elites need to blunt or subvert the critical work of researchers. Pushing the critical project of research (Adams, Callahan, Mills, Bauman, and Sassen are among the decent models) is therefore essential to good science in education. What s critique? Critique is the habit of asking questions, especially difficult, dangerous, and certainly peremptory questions. It s founded on skepticism. The more research is regimented, prescribed, and standardized (usually on the basis of the regime s articulation of quality), the less skeptical, the less circumspect, the less critical and the less useful the effort becomes. In the end, research conducted along these lines turns into evaluation or engineering and abandons the project of research all together. For an image of this sort of perversion, visit the What Works Clearinghouse the subject of Alan Schoenfeld s report (Schoenfeld, 2006). Much more can be said about critique, but not here. Second warning. The second warning is that globalization suppresses local conceptions of a decent life, with Western schooling (and its scholarly toolkit in school administration) prominently assisting (Foster, 2004). In the West there is much chatter about world-class phenomena. A Google 430

9 The Decline of Western Education Research search will prove illuminating to skeptics. World-class is thought to describe the best of the very best, on a planetary scale. It is made out to be what everyone should strive toward (excellence), want (buy), or accept (pay for as if it were in the public interest). It s nonetheless possible that the best life is a one lived locally, aimed at improving local realities through the appreciation and development of local meanings and practices. On existential terms, of course, a local life is the only one really possible, except for select members of the global power elite (Bauman, 1998). But talk about the best life is entirely foolish because humans live well in many places and in many ways. These differences are famously incompatible, commensurate, and valuable. Education must accommodate this diversity, and so must education research. Four Alternatives If Western models of schooling and of education research are not as advertised, then what are the alternatives for education research? Centuries of colonialism and imperialism have spread the Western model so widely, that the question must be posed again and again, pressingly. The alternatives seem to me to include the following prominently: (1) looking at schooling from the perspectives of ordinary people, not from that of the power elites or the school profession; (2) thinking about what distinguishes research that honors a critical mission from other sorts of writing and other sorts of action; (3) regarding the deployment of methods critically studying locally a trendy Western only by first problematizing it; (4) when thinking about schooling, keeping education much more clearly in view. Education from the perspectives of ordinary people. Systems of schooling are commonly sponsored by national regimes for their own purposes. Ordinary people in local communities often do not share and should not rightly be anticipated to share these national priorities (Scott, 1998). In the contemporary world, moreover, national priorities are increasingly shaped by the priorities of the global power elite by the ideology of globalism and the supposedly natural process of globalization. This general observation is not less true, for instance, in the U.S. than in Turkey. But it remains a question of who is doing what to whom and why. Often, for instance, professional educators assume that they know what is educationally best for students and families. They most often assert this claim in total ignorance of the lives of families. In national systems that 431

10 Craig B. Howley assigns teachers to local schools from the center (as in Turkey, France, Greece, and many if not most nations), the odds favoring this ignorance increase. But even in the U.S., with schools not organized nationally, such ignorance is common. When the ignorance is not profound, as in many rural places, the norms of the profession its ideology as a technology, for instance impose a kind of amnesia on many teachers and administrators who are themselves local people. The widespread ignorance has been reinforced by 100 years of work in school administration and 50 years of research in school administration. This body of research has never taken up the organization of systems that take into respectful account the circumstances, needs, and local aspirations of families. Instead, it has focused on organizing (and perfecting) systems that honor the convenience of the state, meet the requirements of business, and that seek to raise the aspirations of local people to include many years of schooling to the detriment of their education. Obviously, this abandoned project abandoned early in the history of the field harbors a vast unexplored and unarticulated research agenda. Its motives will differ from the familiar ones, its products will differ, and its utility will certainly differ. There is, however, one thing to make clear. Decent education on these terms will not be inferior to the currently favored Western model. It will teach reading, writing, mathematics, science, and history. Students will learn a variety useful things and be able to do them. What distinguishes research from other sorts of writing and action? The issue here is practicality and usefulness and whose conceptions of these matters researchers accept. Indeed, looking to education research to solve immediate practical problems reconstructs research as something it is not but this argument is not the old, sorry one about the distinctions between basic and applied research. All of education research is applied research. The distinction being made will be difficult for some researchers to grasp. It turns on a subtle point of ontology. Oscar Wilde, the playwright and Anglo-Irish bad boy of the late 19 th century, may have put it best: For what is a practical scheme? A practical scheme is either a scheme that is already in existence, or a scheme that could be carried out under existing conditions. But it is exactly the existing conditions that one objects to; and any scheme that could accept these conditions is wrong and foolish. (Wilde, 1891/1992, 43) 432

11 The Decline of Western Education Research Education research proper that is, a legitimate research effort will begin with a sharp appreciation of such impracticality: with an appreciation of the posture of power elites that resistance is futile. Resistance, of course, certainly does not entail effects anticipated by the power elites to be helpful. And that perception of unhelpfulness is the source of the charge of impracticality. One thought, perhaps a practical one, is that education research that takes seriously the outlook of ordinary people as opposed to that of the school profession or the power elites (global or national) will be appropriately skeptical, critical, and therefore will be more objective and more useful than the typical exercise in education research. In this light understanding the critical project of education research and its stronger claim to objectivity than research that is insufficiently skeptical and critical it s important to distinguish research proper from other, quite different projects, that are commonly confused with research in the academy. These seemingly related genres include education evaluation, education development (engineering), and education journalism: Evaluation is a kind of investigation that is specifically paid to judge the worth of a program or material, most often by the operators or sponsors of the program or by the developer of the materials to be evaluated. Development is the process of creating programs or materials (of the sort later subjected to summative evaluation); the investigations of developers relate to creating the project, with small-scale formative evaluation part of their toolkit. Journalism about education is by nature biased. Corporate ownership and freedom of the press (where applicable and especially where not applicable) ensure this bias. Subsequent discussion considers some of the relevant details and contrasts, but each of these differing projects (evaluation, engineering, and journalism) harbors exceptions that prove the rule. The point, here, though, is not their similarities, but their differences. In the case of evaluation, economics clumps trumps objectivity quite overtly. Evaluators are most often paid by the very programs or materials they are evaluating, and their job is to pronounce the worth of such programs or materials (Scriven, 1999). Pronouncing such a judgment is a responsibility fraught with practical difficulty (offending the clients), and it 433

12 Craig B. Howley is therefore most often poorly discharged. Even when done very well, evaluators must moderate the project of critique in the name of not alienating the client. Compromises of all sorts are imposed by the nature of this work. This observation is not an indictment, but an observation. Development cannot even hope to engage the issue of objectivity. Its ends are preconceived to match a marketable need and the only objectivity that development offers is the product itself. No representation is being made in development per se: the product speaks, one might say, for itself. Subsequent to development, of course, many representations are made about the usefulness or effectiveness of the product, and in the case of commercially produced school materials these representations take the form of advertising and are often inadequately warranted, unwarranted, or even misleading. Sometimes they are just fraudulent. Journalism aims to report a story already identified as newsworthy (by criteria seldom publicly disclosed). Although a very good investigative journalist can work in ways that resemble the ways a good qualitative researcher works, journalists nearly always labor under pressing deadlines that are not kind to the care required in good research. Journalists, further, serve at the pleasure of editors and owners whose interests not only determine content and style but even the fine details of diction that are the trademarks of particular newspapers or magazines. Again, this is not an indictment, but an observation (and as with the observation about evaluation, these come in part from my personal experience). Finally, demonstrable bias is not only permissible in journalism, it is sometimes explicitly desired (this bias is what the phrase freedom of the press permits and rightly values). Given these distinctions, it would also seem that research that is properly skeptical and adequately critical would be more objective than research that exhibits little (or narrow) skepticism and minimizes critique. Certainly, deft practitioners of these arts (research, evaluation, development, and journalism) can produce work that blurs the posited distinctions. Nonetheless, the objectivity of research is not a airy hope or a dubious assertion. Its objectivity stems from, and is grounded in, the role of doubt as the central value of the research endeavor. Research, for instance, embraces well-worn routines to minimize a wide range of threats to validity. Doubt and problematize to ensure objectivity. In this light, it is essential to regard the deployment of methods critically and never to study locally an imported school practice (imported, that is from trendy Western practice), 434

13 The Decline of Western Education Research certainly not without first problematizing the practice, based on local knowledge and the outlook of ordinary people. Failing this outlook, researchers abandon both critique and much hope for objective outlook. Why would research that problematizes local issues be more objective than research that does not? In education research conventional wisdom and the influence of power elites too often determine theoretical frameworks (what counts as important), the actual research questions (problems considered in need of practical attention), and the nature of acceptable answers (conclusions and recommendations, in particular, but also actual findings). If this claim seems preposterous or unfair, let me suggest an illustrative case of compromised objectivity in a line of Western education research in school administration and policy. The example relates to one of my lines of research the circumstances of smaller rural schools. Turkey has many more of these (per capita) than the U.S., but still, nearly 40% of U.S. schools are located in rural places and small towns, even in a nation in which 80% of the population lives in metropolitan areas. Rural and small-town schools, in the U.S. as in many nations, are simply smaller than schools in other locales. From 1950 through about 1990, U.S. education research in school administration firmly insisted that bigger schools and school districts 1 were inherently, and for many reasons, better than smaller schools and school districts. And many schools and districts were closed. The U.S. now has only 10% of the school districts it had in 1930 (see the various historical reports from the U.S. National Center for Education Statistics, all easily accessible online). The closures of schools and even districts continue. The massive closures represent 100 years of conventional wisdom, with an uncritical research agenda to support it. Recent research on small schools and districts has nonetheless taken a 1 School districts in the U.S. are geographic regions in which local authority for education is vested. These Local Education Agencies (another term for school district ) are lead by a superintendent and a local school board (most often elected, but sometimes appointed) who make and execute policy for the district. The U.S. maintains some 14,500 such public school districts, which administer some 86,000 elementary and secondary schools. School districts themselves are linked in a chain of command to the State Department of Education (SEA) of the state in which they are located. Increasingly, research has shown that the influence of the SEA sharply circumscribes the actions of the LEAs, although the strength of this influence certainly varies among the 50 states. 435

14 Craig B. Howley decidedly critical turn in the U.S. It has shown that there are test-score advantages to smaller schools and districts for impoverished students (see Howley & Howley, 2004, for an example and a summary of this line of research). For students from affluent families, larger schools seem to confer academic advantages. Possibly, therefore, the creation of larger schools and districts helps the rich get richer and the poor to get poorer, and that growing separation of rich and poor is in fact a well documented phenomenon in recent U.S. history. More shockingly, very few (n = 4) actual studies of cost-savings from closures (a major claim of administrators seeking to close schools) have been undertaken by school administration researchers in 100 years of consolidation efforts. None that I know of has appeared in peer-reviewed journals. These trends led an official task force in one state (Louisiana) to conclude, unusually and courageously, that 30 years of school administration research about school and district size had been biased (Louisiana Department of Education, 2003). This bias, in fact, favored the outlook of the power elite and the conventional wisdom of the field. I would argue that this situation is not unusual but pertains much more widely to education research than is thought to be the case. Predictably, ordinary poor people and communities are the losers. Given this prevalent structuring of bias, where does the necessary fund of doubt and critical outlook arise that will facilitate objectivity? Happily, the first suggested alternative viewing matters from the perspective of ordinary people is an alternative full of opportunities to doubt. This outlook harbors opportunities to practice the sort of skepticism that makes research worth doing and that develops findings worth knowing and using. Why take this outlook? Education, one might observe especially education in the guise of public schooling ought to be on the side of ordinary people. But there are, of course, many other opportunities. Each time leaders in the field of schooling or the makers of education policy announce a certainty, there is reason for researchers to exercise doubt on behalf of the common good. Neither education nor the mere running of schools rests on any certainty. What one confronts instead are approximate, and very changeable, probabilities or odds. Pronouncements that everyone shall adhere to the 101 provisions of policy require a strong dose of objectivity. This is an extremely valuable public service that education researchers can supply. 436

15 The Decline of Western Education Research To facilitate one s own doubting one can keep a permanent list of locally important issues that have received little or no attention from education research, but which are treated professionally as if no such research is needed (the supposed savings from closing schools is a good example). It is, however, difficult work to perceive these issues in the first place, let alone study them, because conventional wisdom is by definition blind to them, biased against studying them. Worse, we are all subject to, trained in, and encouraged to sustain conventional wisdom. Colleges of education give courses that accomplish this end. We teach those very courses. In attempting to see our way to this sort of research, we are struggling with our own blindness. Nonetheless, I once kept such a list (pertinent, of course, to the U.S. circumstance): the dilemmas of rural school busing, the configuration of grades in a school, the teaching of math in particular contexts, the costsavings of school closures, the character of the rhetoric used in school reform policies, the conflict of constructivist pedagogies and classical management models for accountability, the strange lack of descriptions of schools that don t work, and so forth. In Turkey, and everywhere, interesting issues lurk just behind the silence of whatever conventional wisdom prevails locally. So the particular alternative suggested here is to problematize the very thing that seems most obvious, most taken-for-granted, or most out-ofbounds to one s colleagues, but especially to the power-elite as represented in the conventional wisdom of school administration and in the usual procedures of the academic relations of school administration. Keep education rather than schooling in view. Education is the big picture; schooling is supposed to supply education, but it can t. The reason schooling cannot simply provide education is that school-based education requires, as David Cohen (1988) suggested, the cooperation of students in schools and this is often difficult to secure, for a variety of reasons having to do with the ordinary lives of ordinary people. Impoverished students in the West, for instance, often seem to understand whose interests schools serve (i.e., the power elite, the education profession itself), and they withhold cooperation. Cohen s observation, however, highlights a truth important to all human beings: each human is inalienably in charge of his own education. Prisoners have written about the strange freedom they can struggle to maintain within themselves while held captive. And schools too often and increasingly resemble prisons, confining people rather than helping them to free themselves. 437

16 Craig B. Howley For education researchers, keeping education in view means remaining skeptical about the institution of schooling as it deals with the mission of education. And this outlook enables skepticism of Western trendiness in school practice and research, facilitates adherence to the critical project of research per se (rather than evaluation, engineering, or journalism), and it arguably obliges researchers to take the standpoint of ordinary people. The Problem of the Education Baby and the Bad Bath Water 2 The faultiness of Western approaches to education research do not in my estimation lie with the project of research founded on the ideals of doubt and objectivity. Some postmodern critics think otherwise, and they would not merely disown bad research, but the whole project of research (for instance, as a hegemonic Grand Narrative). It s possible they are right, but I doubt it. Education research, it is also said, is all application and no base. Western analysts and researchers too often presume that, because a field is an applied science, it must be conceived to accomplish or facilitate a particular action. For instance, naïve doctoral students (reflecting conventional wisdom) want to ask such questions as, How can we raise achievement in mathematics? as if that were a research question. It s not research, it s action, and posing such questions corrupts both action and research. The political theorist Hannah Arendt (1959) pointedly reminds us that action is not a thing, not a product, and unlike a study, action never reaches any conclusions but feeds ceaselessly and unpredictably back into more action. Studies research studies for instance do reach conclusions with respect to their findings but also with respect to their reality as cultural objects. Studies end, reports are created, the researchers move on. The studies abide, unchanged forever (in most cases). This characteristic reminds us that research belongs to the realm of contemplation, even in an applied realm like education. Furthermore, if we cannot have contemplation, we cannot have education. So we had better have research that is sufficiently skeptical, critical, and informed by wide reading and not narrowed to the point of powerlessness. Lacking good research, it s all just schooling. 2 A familiar adage in English advises humans not to throw out the baby with the bath water. 438

Going Home 02: At a Duty-free Shop Hi! How are you today? Today s lesson is about At a Duty-free Shop. Let s make learning English fun! Eve Dönüş 02: Duty-free Satış Mağazasında Exercise 1 Vocabulary and

Level Test for Beginners 2 Directions: This is a level test Basic. Follow your teacher and proceed to the test. Your teacher will give you a score after the test. The total score is 30 points. Talimatlar:

Possessive Endings In English, the possession of an object is described by adding an s at the end of the possessor word separated by an apostrophe. If we are talking about a pen belonging to Hakan we would

Profiling the Urban Social Classes in Turkey: Economic Occupations, Political Orientations, Social Life-Styles, Moral Values Presentation of the Basic Findings of a Public Opinion Survey Supported with

THE IMPACT OF AUTONOMOUS LEARNING ON GRADUATE STUDENTS PROFICIENCY LEVEL IN FOREIGN LANGUAGE LEARNING ABSTRACT The purpose of the study is to investigate the impact of autonomous learning on graduate students

What Is Team Leadership? What Is Team Leadership? Team leadership is the management of a group of people brought together to work to achieve a common goal.in order to get everyone to work as one functioning

* DETERMINING THE CURRENT AND FUTURE OPINIONS OF THE STUDENTS IN SECONDARY EDUCATION ON NANOBIOTECHNOLOGY * KARATAY yunussevis1907@hotmail.com, fatihdogan@comu.edu.tr, ramazankaratay@gmail.com ÖZET i (n=273)

WEEK 11 CME323 NUMERIC ANALYSIS Lect. Yasin ORTAKCI yasinortakci@karabuk.edu.tr 2 INTERPOLATION Introduction A census of the population of the United States is taken every 10 years. The following table

The Supporting People Logo Insanlari ve bagimsiz yasami destekleme The Supporting People Door in Watermark The Supporting People Introduction Helping you to live more independently Daha bagimsiz yasamak

It was proposed by John McConnell at the 1969 UNESCO conference. Our planet is a mysterious orb of mind and spirit, a world of hope and love - but, unfortunately, a world of clashing thoughts and feelings.

EMTRAS [Turkish] My Headteacher is Okul müdürüm My Year Manager is Sınıf Müdürüm My Form Tutor is Sınıf öğretmenim My Form is Sınıfım P.E. is on Beden eğitimi dersimin günü I must bring in a T-shirt, shorts

COURSE LIST Institute of Social Sciences Field : Language and Literature (Please note that Erasmus students are allowed to take courses from lists of all faculties/schools according to their needs or interests.

ERROR Unlike analytical solutions, numerical methods have an error range. In addition to this input data may have errors. There are 5 basis source of error: The Source of Error 1. Measuring Errors Data

Lesson 23: How Ders 23: Nasıl Reading (Okuma) How are you? (Nasılsın?) How are your parents? (Ailen nasıl?) How was the interview? (Görüşme nasıldı?) How is your work? (İşin nasıl?) How do you go to school?